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Jeffrey Paul Golden

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Jeffrey Paul Golden

Birth
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
Death
30 Sep 2019 (aged 76)
Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 38. Lot 093
Memorial ID
View Source
Father's Name: Alfred Golden
Mother's Maiden Name: Lillian Kessler
Place of Death: Madison, Dane Co., WI
Place of Birth: Brooklyn, NY
Occupation: Communication Specialist
Source, Cemetery Records

Excerpt from Cress Funeral & Cremation service Obit
Jeffrey Golden, 76, passed from this life 30 September 2019 on the first day of Rosh Hashanah, due to complications of septicemia. He was born 5 November 1942 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, a second generation American. His grandparents emigrated to this country at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries from eastern Europe and Russia at a time when this country opened its arms to refugees. As a child he heard Yiddish in his home; Yiddish expressions peppered his everyday speech. His Hebrew name was Yitzhak Yosef. From the time of his Bar Mitzvah until he became a parent, he was a "cultural" Jew. However, as a new father, he found a community in Congregation Shaarei Shamayim, and Gates of Heaven Services during the High Holy Days.

Words were the coin of his realm. He wrote poetry in two languages: English and Spanish. On formal assessments he was rated as a well educated native Spanish speaker. He used his language facility in the Peace Corp in Columbia 1965-1966. He was a United Nations certified translator for the University of Wisconsin Chancellor's office. Throughout his career, he produced Spanish language videos, translated, narrated, wrote editorials in Spanish newspapers, such as "La Comunidad News," and provided Spanish language outreach services for the Dane County Health Department for Spanish-speaking residents. Recently he was translating into English a novel by an Argentinian author. His final, and perhaps favorite contribution was in his retirement when he served as a volunteer medical translator at Dane County's only free health clinic providing specialty medical care, the Benevolent Specialty Clinic in Madison. He believed he was paying back in his community for a life well lived here.

Jeffrey attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison for both his undergraduate and graduate education. He was admitted as a senior-graduate student to the Speech Department. He re-started his graduate work in theatre and ended in radio, television and film. During his graduate years he worked at the Instructional Research Laboratory, the Laboratory for International Research in Education, the Space Science and Engineering EDSAT project, and the Multimedia Instructional Laboratory.

He continued his career in communications at the Waisman Center, Ohio Medical Products, Edgewood College, Madison College, the Dane County Health Department and his own business, Golden Communications. His work was acknowledged and awarded by the John Muir Medical Film Festival, the National Educational Film and Video Festival, the International Film and Television Festival of New York, the Cine Awards of 1980, 1983 and 1993, the Festival of the Americas, Telly Awards in 1992 and 1993, and the Industrial Film Festival Award for Creative Excellence.

Jeffrey was an actor. He had a following with audiences from the Wisconsin Players producing in the Wisconsin UnionTheater, the Theatre Guild, Madison Savoyards, and the Madison Repertory Theater. He loved Harold Pinter, Edward Albee, and William Shakespeare. He played title roles Falstaff and Macbeth; He was George in "Who's of Virginia Woolf," and Tevya in "Fiddler on the Roof." He once produced a play, once directed a play, and also once invested in a Broadway play, "Bleacher Bums" by the Organic Theater. He was one of two actors in the dinner/theater production of "Sleuth" at the Wilson St. East Playhouse. His last public theater performance was in 1994, just after his children had become toddlers and were beckoning him home. He served on the Dane County Cultural Affairs Commission from 1995 through 1998. Informally, he was an engaging storyteller and loved nothing better than a lively, intellectual conversation.

While he has had sporadic contact with Wisconsin Public Radio, his most enduring, public work was as the voice for Wisconsin Public Television. Among his friends and family, his distinctive sonorous voice earned him the moniker "Mr. Golden Tones."

His crowning vocation was being a father. From the moment he first held his son and daughter in his arms until the last day of his life, his children were his utmost concern. Likewise, they were attached to him, idolized him, and in adulthood counted him as a friend. He took his children camping, and cheered them on in athletics, two activities that had never been part of his own childhood. He traveled to South America several times with his son to seek, then visit his son's birth family. They cooked together. Jeff built a house with an apartment, where his son lived. With his daughter, he enjoyed brunch and dinners out, movies, and shared theater as a joint passion.

Jeff was hospitalized mostly at St. Mary's Hospital for over six weeks following a catastrophic episode of sepsis. His was a day to day struggle for his life. His family was at his side as he overcame one health obstacle after another. His will to live, his humor, his drive to communicate even though he could not speak were courageous, inspirational, and loving.

He was preceded in death by his parents Lillian Kessler and Alfred Golden, his aunt Harriet Golden, uncle Barney Kessler, and grandparents Laike Neshkes, Charles Golden (aka Girivitsky), Millie Kelman (aka Shepshowitz), and Harry Kessler.
Father's Name: Alfred Golden
Mother's Maiden Name: Lillian Kessler
Place of Death: Madison, Dane Co., WI
Place of Birth: Brooklyn, NY
Occupation: Communication Specialist
Source, Cemetery Records

Excerpt from Cress Funeral & Cremation service Obit
Jeffrey Golden, 76, passed from this life 30 September 2019 on the first day of Rosh Hashanah, due to complications of septicemia. He was born 5 November 1942 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, a second generation American. His grandparents emigrated to this country at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries from eastern Europe and Russia at a time when this country opened its arms to refugees. As a child he heard Yiddish in his home; Yiddish expressions peppered his everyday speech. His Hebrew name was Yitzhak Yosef. From the time of his Bar Mitzvah until he became a parent, he was a "cultural" Jew. However, as a new father, he found a community in Congregation Shaarei Shamayim, and Gates of Heaven Services during the High Holy Days.

Words were the coin of his realm. He wrote poetry in two languages: English and Spanish. On formal assessments he was rated as a well educated native Spanish speaker. He used his language facility in the Peace Corp in Columbia 1965-1966. He was a United Nations certified translator for the University of Wisconsin Chancellor's office. Throughout his career, he produced Spanish language videos, translated, narrated, wrote editorials in Spanish newspapers, such as "La Comunidad News," and provided Spanish language outreach services for the Dane County Health Department for Spanish-speaking residents. Recently he was translating into English a novel by an Argentinian author. His final, and perhaps favorite contribution was in his retirement when he served as a volunteer medical translator at Dane County's only free health clinic providing specialty medical care, the Benevolent Specialty Clinic in Madison. He believed he was paying back in his community for a life well lived here.

Jeffrey attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison for both his undergraduate and graduate education. He was admitted as a senior-graduate student to the Speech Department. He re-started his graduate work in theatre and ended in radio, television and film. During his graduate years he worked at the Instructional Research Laboratory, the Laboratory for International Research in Education, the Space Science and Engineering EDSAT project, and the Multimedia Instructional Laboratory.

He continued his career in communications at the Waisman Center, Ohio Medical Products, Edgewood College, Madison College, the Dane County Health Department and his own business, Golden Communications. His work was acknowledged and awarded by the John Muir Medical Film Festival, the National Educational Film and Video Festival, the International Film and Television Festival of New York, the Cine Awards of 1980, 1983 and 1993, the Festival of the Americas, Telly Awards in 1992 and 1993, and the Industrial Film Festival Award for Creative Excellence.

Jeffrey was an actor. He had a following with audiences from the Wisconsin Players producing in the Wisconsin UnionTheater, the Theatre Guild, Madison Savoyards, and the Madison Repertory Theater. He loved Harold Pinter, Edward Albee, and William Shakespeare. He played title roles Falstaff and Macbeth; He was George in "Who's of Virginia Woolf," and Tevya in "Fiddler on the Roof." He once produced a play, once directed a play, and also once invested in a Broadway play, "Bleacher Bums" by the Organic Theater. He was one of two actors in the dinner/theater production of "Sleuth" at the Wilson St. East Playhouse. His last public theater performance was in 1994, just after his children had become toddlers and were beckoning him home. He served on the Dane County Cultural Affairs Commission from 1995 through 1998. Informally, he was an engaging storyteller and loved nothing better than a lively, intellectual conversation.

While he has had sporadic contact with Wisconsin Public Radio, his most enduring, public work was as the voice for Wisconsin Public Television. Among his friends and family, his distinctive sonorous voice earned him the moniker "Mr. Golden Tones."

His crowning vocation was being a father. From the moment he first held his son and daughter in his arms until the last day of his life, his children were his utmost concern. Likewise, they were attached to him, idolized him, and in adulthood counted him as a friend. He took his children camping, and cheered them on in athletics, two activities that had never been part of his own childhood. He traveled to South America several times with his son to seek, then visit his son's birth family. They cooked together. Jeff built a house with an apartment, where his son lived. With his daughter, he enjoyed brunch and dinners out, movies, and shared theater as a joint passion.

Jeff was hospitalized mostly at St. Mary's Hospital for over six weeks following a catastrophic episode of sepsis. His was a day to day struggle for his life. His family was at his side as he overcame one health obstacle after another. His will to live, his humor, his drive to communicate even though he could not speak were courageous, inspirational, and loving.

He was preceded in death by his parents Lillian Kessler and Alfred Golden, his aunt Harriet Golden, uncle Barney Kessler, and grandparents Laike Neshkes, Charles Golden (aka Girivitsky), Millie Kelman (aka Shepshowitz), and Harry Kessler.

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Jeffrey Paul Golden
יצחק יוסף בן חנן וליבא [Yitzhak Yosef ben Chanan v’Libba]
Nov. 5, 1942
Sept. 30. 2019
OSO Y PANAMBÍ: ALWAYS BELOVED



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